History: In the 1980s, Zeus considered creating
more topical gods. Some are apparent offspring of other Gods, while
others may be mortals who ascended to godhood. Individual
information is detailed in the sub-profiles below.

Comments: Created by Smallwood.

I thought this too obvious too mention, but
just in case, for you young whippersnappers out there:These are all
parodies of Eighties icons such as the Brooke Shields jeans
commercials, The Walkman, Rubik's Cube, Pac Man and others.
--Will U

Jules Keen, aka the Streak,
was also sought for godhood in the 1980s, and may be associated
with this sub-section of the Olympian Pantheon.I'm both sort of bemused and intrigued at the same
time; I'd say they were all creations of Hermes creating a group
of like individuals to hang around him. He would have probably
given them false memories to erase their mortal lives.If they ever
popped up again, it would have to be in Thor as he restored their
mortal guises and they got used to the culture shock of the
Twenty-First century.
--Will U

One might speculate that
these Gods are the result of the work of Khronos/Chronus, the god
of time, not yet seen in the Marvel Universe. First off, there is the Olympian Titan,
and then there is his religousimportance. Cronus (Roman
Saturn), god of the Earth, overthrew Ouranous (Roman Uranus) and
until the worship of Zeus began, he was reigned as god above all
(time, creation, infinity). As an abstract god (i.e. a god of a
intangible object you couldn't see or touch), his worshippers
made him mightier than Ouranous and placed him in the cosmology
along side other such gods (Chaos, Aether, Hemera....).But then Zeus overthrew him and
ruined all that. Cronus wasn't the maligned figure that modern
fiction has portrayed him. He was a god who tried to control time/
his own destiny by consuming his children and hopefully
preventing his fate. Cronus still had devout worshippers even
after Zeus and Olympian worship came to pass. The ancient Greeks
claimed that Cronus was dead, but Cronus worshippers were forced
west (think about the Jews forced out of the Holy Land by the
Romans). They resettled in what would be Italy and taught their
rites to the tribes there. They fused the worship of Cronus with
the god Saturn (or in the Marvel universe where the gods
actually exist, they started calling him by the name Saturn they
had for him in their own language). Cronus/Saturn then fathered
the first kings of what would be Rome until Aeneas conquered the
land. Their combined ancestors founded Rome.In classical folklore, the image of
Zeus overthrowing Cronus became the model for the spirit of the
new year overthrowing Father Time at the beginning of the new
year, and the new year in the Olympian calender actually fell on
another day. Father Time would be an alias for Cronus.
--Will U

These were only showcased in
this single feature, so there's no evidence that they exist on
Earth-616. Nor is there any evidence against it, either!

Maybe Rubicus Cubicus is actually a not-too-distant
cousin of the Cenobites (from Hellraiser)... their infernal
puzzle boxesmust have been a direct inspiration for Rubik's Cube.-- Sean Curtin

In Zeus' All-New Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe A to Z HC#14 entry it was confirmed that he created the Gods of the 80s.--David A. Zuckerman

WALKERS - @
sixth century, originally composed of twelve Britons, men
of power, traveled along the ley lines(lines of power),
establishing landmarks and guide-lines, trained the
druids, created routes from earth to otherworld.
--(UK)Hulk Comic#6/2, 61/2

A predominantly benevolent entity, Bromo does
at times strike the faithless with the wrath of indigestion.
Unique to the Bromo cult is the ritual grilled sacrifice of two
unblemished oxen, special sauce, onions, lettuce, cheese,
lettuce, and pickles on a sesame seed bun.

Goddess of Mindless
Television Entertainment and titular head of the Screen Goddesses
Guild.

Born a minor celestial
of the order of angels, Jiggle assumed the status of a divinity
upon her marriage to Neilsen, the God of Ratings. The Service of
Jiggle includes the Latin Litany, "Veni Vidi Jigglit"
("I came, I saw, she jiggled").

As preached by St. Sony, "The Guardian
Walkman protecteth his flock from political press conferences,
occupational tedium, berating bosses, and shrewish wives. He
guideth them through the midst of moving vehicles and standeth
fast by them in the loneliness of the subway."